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Poor Women in Shakespeare

Poor Women in Shakespeare

Poor Women in Shakespeare

Author:
Fiona McNeill, University of Oklahoma
Published:
July 2012
Availability:
Available
Format:
Paperback
ISBN:
9781107405936

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$57.00
USD
Paperback
$127.00 USD
Hardback

    Poor women do not fit easily into the household in Shakespeare. They shift in and out of marriages, households, and employments, carrying messages, tallying bills, and making things happen; never the main character but always evoking the ever-present problem of female poverty in early modern England. Like the illegal farthings that carried their likenesses, poor women both did and did not fit into the household and marriage market. They were both essential to and excluded from the economy. They are both present and absent on the early modern stage. In the drama, they circulate between plots, essential because they are so mobile, but largely unnoticed because of their mobility. These female characters represent an exploration of gender and economic roles at the bottom, as England shifted from feudalism to empire in the span of Shakespeare's lifetime. We find their dramas played out in the plays of Shakespeare and his contemporaries.

    • The first study in this area to focus exclusively on poor and homeless women in the plays of Shakespeare and his contemporaries
    • Includes an extensive research bibliography on poverty and vagrancy
    • Includes a chapter on the popular play The Roaring Girl, widely studied on drama courses

    Reviews & endorsements

    "While Poor Women in Shakespeare may not add much to Shakespearean literacy criticism directly, with its careful scholarship it will facilitate a historicist approach to some of the plays."
    --The Shakespeare Newsletter

    See more reviews

    Product details

    July 2012
    Paperback
    9781107405936
    268 pages
    226 × 150 × 20 mm
    0.39kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Introduction: maid, wife, and widow: re-organizing early modern women
    • 1. Free and bound maids: poor women in early industrial England
    • 2. Pregnant maids: the new bastardy laws
    • 3. Playhouse, courtroom, and pulpit: poor women in the news
    • 4. Masterless women in early modern London
    • 5. Poor women in the New World
    • Bibliography.
      Author
    • Fiona McNeill , University of Oklahoma

      Fiona McNeill is a former professor and private book developer and holds a PhD on the subject of Shakespeare. She is the author of Ten Steps to an A.